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Right after you were born, the blood and vernix on your body was washed off by a nurse or even your mom or dad. Have you taken a bath or shower since the day you were born? Of course you have. Our bodies continually become dirtied, requiring new cleansing. It...
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I recently had the opportunity to read through almost all of the books of R.C. Sproul. Along the way I built a collection of some of the best quotes from each one of them. Here are several of the best from 5 Things Every Christian Needs to Grow.
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The 2011 Study Cruise to the cradle of Christianity is underway as we explore Italy, Israel, Ephesus and Greece. The cradle in which the infant church was nurtured was the Mediterranean world of antiquity. We will begin our tour of Israel today, experiencing the sacred space where our redemption was accomplished. You can follow the trip by looking for blog updates and viewing photos here.
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The world has changed. We are not the same people we were on September 10, 2001. The events of September 11, 2001, and the events that followed in ensuing years have not only changed America but nations and peoples throughout the world. People are more afraid and less naïve. People are more aware of the differences between world religions and of the different cultures of those world religions. People are either more antagonistic towards the religion of their fathers or they are more committed adherents.
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Name any catastrophic event in the course of history, and it seems as if God has abandoned the human race. Where was He while the Israelites groaned in oppressive slavery for 400 years? Where was He during the Holocaust? Where was He on 9/11? It sometimes seems that God is silent, watching the horrors of life on earth without pity or concern. R.C. Sproul discusses this very issue—the role of God when the ideas of men collide and wreak havoc. This week you can get this paperback book for a donation of any amount.
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Nancy Pearcey’s second book about culture in 5 years, Saving Leonardo is subtitled A Call to Resist the Secular Assault on Mind, Morals, & Meaning. Refined through lectures at Philadelphia Biblical University, Saving Leonardo complements her earlier book, Total Truth (2005). According to jacket notes, Saving Leonardo addresses the student of culture, with the goal of exposing secularism’s destructive and dehumanizing forces. Readers are left with one caveat: what you see and hear in the arts and popular media is not the innocent expression of personal opinion, but often deliberate antagonism toward a Judeo-Christian world and life view.
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Randi works with supporters interested in making contributions to our work through significant gifts, donations of stock or other appreciated assets, and through their estate plans. She has overseen HERE WE STAND: THE CAMPAIGN FOR LIGONIER MINISTRIES since its launch in the fall of 2008.
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The New Testament views Christian obedience as the practice of "good works." Christians are to be "rich in good works" (1 Tim. 6:18; cf. Matt. 5:16; Eph. 2:10; 2 Tim. 3:17; Titus 2:7, 14; 3:8, 14). A good deed is one done according to the right standard, God's revealed will; from a right motive, love for God and others; and with a right purpose, the glory of God.
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